Posts Tagged ‘Mclaren’

McLaren, Senna, Lewis, Jenson and Monaco

Monday, August 9th, 2010

If you’re at all inter­ested in cars and motor racing, you probably caught the best edition of TG ever a few weeks ago: the one where Lewis Hamilton finally got to drive his hero Ayrton Senna’s Mclaren MP4/​4.
Well, check out the video below of Lewis and teammate Jenson Button grooving on their team’s garage full of bygone F1 missiles. It’s truly great to see how genuinely stoked these guys are on what they do.

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Check out also Senna’s preter­natural pole position lap performance at Monaco in 1988. Just stunning.

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James Hunt 'Press Conference', 1976

Friday, July 9th, 2010

They don’t make them like James any more.

He was legendarily chaotic. Before each race he was terrified at the prospect of crashing and burning and dying. He was a unrepentant smoker, drinker and party guy.

But he could drive. Unlike pretty much all of the media trained crop of F1 super­stars that will be at Silverstone this weekend there was a vulner­ab­ility to James Hunt that endeared him to everyone who met him. He was a cool cat.

He won the World Championship F1 champi­onship 34 seasons ago with timeless style. We miss you James.

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The Flying Finns

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

The first Finnish sportsman to be dubbed ‘The Flying Finn’ actually used foot power rather than horsepower. It was a fellow called Hannes Kolehmainen, also known as ‘Smiling Hannes’ who won three gold medals at the 1912 Olympics in neigh­bouring Stockholm.

After Hannes came Paavo Nurmi and Lasse Viren, but after the man who won Olympic 5,000/10,000m golds in Munich and Montréal, Finland’s long distance talent dried up and Flying Finns have been exclus­ively wheel men.

First, it was the rally drivers. Before the world champi­onship proper even began, in 1973, Rauno Aaltonen had pioneered ‘the Scandinavian Flick’ – the practice of flicking a car sideways ‘the wrong way’ on the approach to a corner, so as to increase the arc as you powered through.

Rauno Aaltonen: flickster and innovator

Opponents marvelled at how such a small country could produce so constant a stream of driving talent. Probably though, it was down to the fact that controlling a car on snow and ice became second nature.
As well as Aaltonen in the early days, there was Timo Makkinen and Hannu Mikkola and in 1968 Castrol released a film highlighting the battle between the pair for the 100 Lakes Rally.

It was Markku Alen who became Finland’s first world rally champion in 1978. He was followed in the eighties by Ari Vatanen, Mikkola and Timo Salonen. In the mid eighties, the brutish Group B rally cars with almost limitless power were stunning to watch but a series of awful accidents resulted in the cars being abandoned. One of those saw exciting Finn Henri Toivonen killed alongside co-​​driver Sergio Cresta on the Tour de Corse.

Henri Toivonen, ready for take off in his Lancia

Juha Kankkunen then won the world title four times in eight years before Tommi Makinen won it four times in succession from 1996. The last Finnish champion was Marcus Gronholm in 2002.
Leo Kinnunen was the first circuit driver to adorn his crash helmet with the Flying Finn legend, winning the World Sportscar Championship for Porsche in 1970. By the end of that decade Finland had a racing driver promising great things in F1. More cosmo­politan than some of his rally contem­por­aries, Keke Rosberg lived in Cookham Dean and joined the big time when he won the world champi­onship with Williams in 1982.

He did it in a tragic year which witnessed the deaths of Gilles Villeneuve and young rookie driver Riccardo Paletti, as well as Didier Pironi’s career-​​ending shunt at Hockenheim. Ground effect sealing skirts were back after the FISA/​FOCA political war, with attendant rock hard suspension to stop them destroying themselves. The drivers loathed the cars and complained that there was no warning of where the limit was and that the g-​​forces were so high and the ride so awful, that they got double vision. Eleven different winners in 16 races told you how tough it was. Rosberg won just one of them but his title was hard-​​earned nonetheless.

JJ Lehto was the next to break through to F1, closely followed by Mika Hakkinen, the only Finn to have claimed more than one world title, in 1998 – 9. Hakkinen was the only driver of that era who Michael Schumacher truly feared and with good reason, Hakkinen beating him after season-​​long tussles in Michael’s third and fourth seasons with Ferrari.

Hakkinen it was who also pulled off one of the most memorable overtaking moves in F1 history. It came at Spa in 2000, amid another lead battle with Schumacher. On one lap, Schumacher moved over on Hakkinen, ushering him towards the grass at 200mph plus as they approached the braking area at the end of the great Belgian circuit’s long straight.

Had there been wheel-​​over-​​wheel contact, it would have been an aircraft accident. Hakkinen was furious. Now steelier than ever, he followed Schumacher around the next lap and as they went through the famous Eau Rouge corner back onto the same straight, they came upon Ricardo Zonta’s BAR-​​Honda. Coming over the brow, Schumacher flicked left and Hakkinen, his boot firmly planted, shot alongside the startled Zonta on the right, two wheels on the grass, and passed both of them. Afterwards, Mika quietly explained to Michael, with the aid of some measured hand movements, precisely what it was he hadn’t enjoyed… Very classy.

Mika Hakkinen gets air in his McLaren by Jess Douglas

Kimi Raikkonen had Hakkinen-​​style talent and won the champi­onship for Ferrari in 2007 after coming close with McLaren four years earlier, but lost his Ferrari seat to Alonso and switched to the World Rally Championship. Kimi, like Mika, was never exactly verbose. As with many of the Flying Finns, he was a man of few words but loud actions.

McLaren 12C born (again)

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

The sweeping silhouette and aero aids are picked out in carbon black. 458 Italia anyone?

As the wires are abuzz with the official launch paraphernalia of Maclaren Automotive, we had to make our perhaps predictable take on the new British supercar.

Sure, if McLaren produce a production car it is going to be special. Of course it is going to be loaded with tons of engin­eering knowledge, and perhaps a little trickle down tech from the all-​​conquering Formula One team.

But for us, the way the car looked was always going to be at least as important in the tech that made its tick. And also for us, the relat­ively staid, conven­tional look of the first press and show issues of the 12C were completely underwhelming.

Compared to the brutal, forward-​​leaning stance of the snarling über car that was the F1, it looked rather timid – a rather staid confection that amounted to something akin to the Evora without the quirk. But, looking at these latest pictures, and with the carbon black finish drawing your eye to the whole rather than the parts, you can see how the design cues are at least as remin­iscent of Ferrari’s 458 Italia and the R8. And that can only be a good thing.

Call us shallow. But we would only want one in black.

The Future: Formula 1

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

There were seismic changes to Formula 1 in 2009.

Bickering over the sport’s financial arrange­ments and governance led to FOTA (the Formula One Teams Association) announcing a breakaway champi­onship at the British GP at Silverstone in June, then back-​​tracking once it became evident that Max Mosley’s reign as FISA/​FIA president was truly over and that he would not stand for re-​​election in October’s election.

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Despite the FOTA U-​​turn the fact is that in the last 12 months Formula 1 has witnessed the withdrawal of manufac­turer entries from Honda, BMW and Toyota. And, at the time of writing, Renault is consid­ering bids for its Enstone-​​based operation that was taken over from Benetton at the start of the decade.

Whether the deser­tions are purely the result of a catastrophic economic situation for the motor industry or more deeply entrenched dissat­is­faction over the sport’s governance, is a moot point. Mosley certainly believed that Formula 1 was unviable in the current climate if it basically amounted to a spending contest.

Max argued that manufac­turers have always used F1 for their own promo­tional purposes while it suited, but always follow their own agendas. To safeguard the sport, he said, it needed to be viable for commercially-​​funded private entrants. Events of the past few months seem to have vindicated his assessment. We have returned to a position of multiple private entrant ‘purist’ racing teams, plus Ferrari and Mercedes.

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Back in the seventies, eighties and early nineties, that was basically the sport’s compos­ition. Largely British private teams such as Lotus, Tyrrell, Brabham, McLaren and then Williams dominated with off-​​the-​​shelf Cosworth engines. Opposition came from Ferrari, Alfa Romeo and Matra, then came Renault, BMW, TAG-​​Porsche and Honda as the turbo era dawned.

As Bernie Ecclestone’s vision developed Formula 1 into a world class global sport with unsur­passed reach – the Olympics and the soccer World Cup generate bigger audiences but only once every four years – it became an irres­istible promo­tional platform for the world’s motor manufac­turers. Mercedes, BMW, Jaguar, Ferrari, Honda, Toyota, Renault were all there at the same time – unpre­ced­ented for the sport.

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For some, parti­cip­ation was enough to increase brand awareness but, for others, winning was essential. And they couldn’t all win. Team staffing levels approached four figures and budgets went through the roof. Collectively, the manufac­turers were spending a billion dollars a year on engine devel­opment alone. Mosley, a man who witnessed the off-​​the-​​shelf Cosworth era first hand with his March company, thought it was both bonkers and unsustainable.

Suddenly the independents, including top class outfits like Williams, were strug­gling to be viable businesses without major manufac­turer backing. And, whereas Max and Bernie had been able to control the privateers, often by divide and rule tactics, the presence of heavily backed corporate players threatened to take the sport out of their control. Politics started to dominate sport.

On the plus side, interest grew and compet­ition became closer than ever. In 2009 we enjoyed entire grids covered by little more than one second — unthinkable just a decade ago.

On paper, all the factors that made F1 so attractive to the manufac­turers still remain, albeit that as things stand you can’t go out and beat six or seven of your major rivals. The inter­esting time will come when the economy turns. We will see how many return. The regulatory path followed by new FIA president Jean Todt will also be influ­ential, along with his success or failure in imple­menting a planned glide path of reduced expenditure aimed at reaching early nineties levels. Many have serious doubts about the viability of such a target.
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The immediate future gives rise to some mouth-​​watering match-​​ups on track. None is quite so compelling as the prospect of Britain’s back-​​to-​​back champions, Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button, lining up as team mates in identical McLarens.

Button’s talks with McLaren were initially viewed as expedient for both parties – McLaren was surely turning the screw on Kimi Raikkonen’s negoti­ating team and Button was trying to eke out a bigger pay day from Brawn and Mercedes. Nobody quite believed it when the deal went through.

Some suspect that Button, with the pressure finally off, took temporary leave of his senses. To head into a McLaren envir­onment where Lewis has been king for three years and take him on – is a big ask. Fernando Alonso couldn’t do it when Lewis was a rookie never mind a world champion.

While it’s fair to say that many don’t rate Jenson’s chances too highly, it’s not as simple as all that. Button started ’09 with an undoubted car advantage due to Brawn’s double diffuser and long devel­opment lead time. By the end of the season the team had been caught and arguably overtaken. McLaren initially didn’t cope with the new aero regula­tions but once it solved its problems became a potent force.

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Jean Todt’ puckish of genius when running the Scuderia will be applied to the FIA

Next year with refuelling banned, it will become vitally important to look after your tyres, the rears partic­u­larly, over a race distance. That may play right into the hands of Button’s super-​​smooth style which is likely to take less out of the rubber that Hamilton’s more flamboyant oversteer-​​pronounced technique. On the other side of the coin, the change in handling charac­ter­istics over a race distance is more likely to favour the more adaptable driver, which is likely to be Hamilton. It will be fascin­ating to see how it pans out, not to mention whether or not McLaren can keep a lid on the potential tensions of two star drivers again – something it patently failed to do with Senna/​Prost and Alonso/​Hamilton.

The other great plus is that the future of the British Grand Prix seems assured after Bernie Ecclestone signed a recent 17-​​year deal with Silverstone following the collapse of Donington’s ambitious plan – another victim of the economic situation.

With potential EU compet­ition issues clouding F1 rights ownership issues at the start of the decade, it was no surprise that F1’s new super-​​venues: Sepang, Shanghai, Istanbul, Bahrain, Abu Dhabi and, next year, South Korea, were all outside Europe. Now though, with those issues appar­ently resolved by the FIA divesting itself of the commercial rights, we’ve had Valencia and the new deal for Silverstone. That at least, is a blessing. While the new locations are spectacular – witness Yas Marina in particular – they must always be balanced with F1’s tradi­tional core events.

Mclaren's MP4-12C Online

Monday, October 5th, 2009

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Anyone with even a passing interest in cars can’t help but have noticed that the MP4-​​12C Mclaren’s new road car project and replacement for the near mythical super-​​steed the F1 has hit media portals with full effect.

The new and eagerly awaited product developed by ex F1 team supremo Ron Dennis himself, is set to make petrol­heads’ hearts aflutter the world over when it is finally released in 2011

And, grabbing the media inniti­ative in their bid to presell their latest progeny, McLaren Automotive has launched a new website to act as an online showroom for the new MP4-​​12C. Future customers (as well as mere mortals) can view the 12C in detail through an animated ‘explosion’ (see above) of the car’s technical features.

In addition, users will be able to view a gallery of images from McLaren Automotive’s past and present and also tap into ‘The Insider’, a blog that will be regularly updated with devel­op­ments from the depths of the McLaren Technology Centre.

The car is going to be aimed at a slightly less rarified market than that targeted by the F1 a decade ago, and for us here at influx towers, the under­stated design reminds us a little too readily of the very beautiful and user-​​friendly Lotus Evora. It’s obvious that ideal drag coeffi­cients and the all-​​important rule of the market creates design conver­gence even at this upper levels of car consumption.

Perhaps that’s why Mclaren are eager to show us deep under the skin of their new product.

Watch this space for more devel­op­ments in the drama that is Motorsport-​​Road car crossover.

Mclaren Gets Viral

Friday, March 13th, 2009

The F1 hype machine has well and truly cranked into life with the forth­coming season on the horizon. And in the true spirit of corporate collab­or­ation, Vodaphone has teamed up with Lewis Hamilton and company to produce this clever piece of viral marketing.

And with the BBC having taken over the franchise in term of UK TV coverage, the corpor­ation has launched their excellent web page dedicated to the Grand Prix season.

Whatever you think of the modern manifest­ation of the sport, anyone inter­ested in car design has got to be excited by the design of the newly stripped down cars. We just hope that the expected increase in overtaking encouraged by the shedding of the excessive aerody­namic accoutre­ments of previous seasons comes to pass. We deserve some proper racing at the highest level.

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